Monday, 26 August 2013

I read a story about a man who sat down for a dinner with his family and said grace, thanking God for the food, the hands which prepared it, and for the source of all life. But during the meal he complained about the freshness of the bread, the bitterness of the coffee, and the sharpness of the cheese.

His young daughter questioned him, "Dad, do you think God heard the grace today?" He answered confidently, "Of course"." Then she asked, "And do you think God heard what you said about the coffee, the cheese, and the bread?" Not so confidently, he answered, "Why, yes, I believe so." The little girl concluded, "Then which do you think God believed, Dad?

The man was suddenly ware that his mealtime prayer had become a rote, thoughtless habit rather than an attentive and honest conversation with God. By not concentrating on that important conversation, he had left the door open to let hypocrisy sneak in. Perhaps this was the same kind of realisation that came over the synagogue leader from the gospel story when Jesus pointed out his hypocrisy.

In this story of a crippled woman healed on the Sabbath we see Jesus acting in a loving and compassionate way to someone who had been crippled by a spirit for 18 years! She was bent over and could not straighten up. Presumably she was in a lot of pain too. Jesus healed her. He set her free. When challenged by the synagogue ruler for healing on the holy day, he responded firmly and directly. You hypocrites!

In Jesus' day, the standard belief was that no work should be done on the Sabbath, including the work of healing. Jesus, by healing on the day of rest challenged this belief. He was critised by the synagogue ruler who used his position of power to condemn this act of mercy. By healing the woman Jesus demonstrated that on that
day of rest, she should rest from Satan. After all the Jewish people
untied/freed their animals on the Sabbath to allow them to drink water. The
woman was also bound, not with a rope- but by her condition. So in begrudging
this woman her healing the synagogue ruler was a hypocrite. Once Jesus pointed
this out we read that his critics were silenced in shame and the crowd were
pleased with Jesus' response.

So why is
this story relevant? What can it teach us about being loving and compassionate
today? After all we are unlikely to be faced with an identical dilemma today as
few Christians observe the Sabbath as the Jews did in Jesus time. But we should
try to look beyond the immediate situation to the underlying principles Jesus
is teaching us.

Jesus was
addressing a particular religious convention whereby no work should be done on
the Sabbath. And today we see that each faith community has its own expected
religious code of rules and conventions. From communion, to dress code, or who
can/can't be baptised. We have our own laws. In the passage from the Gospel
this morning, Jesus in his words and actions is teaching us that sometimes
convention must give way in the face of genuine need. At times it is obvious
when this must happen. For example, I would imagine that if an elderly
collapsed during worship, first aid would take precedence over ritual. But
other times it can be more difficult.

Truth be
told, we regularly agree with the synagogue leader. Perhaps not about the
Sabbath, but most of us have rules/laws that we think are particularly
important and we get nervous if we see people not respecting them. It could be
things like, our children's bedtimes or refusing to take any phone calls on our
day off. Or maybe it's a much bigger issue, like traditional gender roles or
human sexuality. Whatever it is, there are some laws we feel should just be
kept. Full stop. And if they aren't, we fear what will unravel next? And that's
what this well-intentioned, law-abiding leader of the synagogue believed. But
his isn't the only perspective.

Compassion
vs Law

Christ
teaches us to value love/compassion above law. And this must have been as
unsettling for his audience then as it must be for us now. It raises difficult
questions of when to insist on law and when to suspend it. Or if things will
fall apart if we get it wrong? But that's the way it is with love: no
guarantees, no assurance of having it turn out the way you thought it was
supposed to, no absolutes. Except this: the God who gave the law out of love
continues to love us and all the world, no matter what.

Jesus
challenges the religious community to think about what keeping the Sabbath
really means. He isn't abolishing the Law of Moses, but helping the people in
the Synagogue to have a better understanding of how to apply the law. And in
the same way I'm not saying we should do away with all church traditions, or
not to take a stance on matters of importance. But when asked what the greatest
commandment was, Jesus replied that we should love God with everything we have
and love our neighbour as ourselves. All the Law and the Prophets hang on these
two commandments. (Matthew 22:36-40). Therefore, if we are hanging onto some
rule, law, or doctrine which prevents us from loving God or loving our neighbour,
then we need to reassess our lives and align ourselves with Christ. Matthew
15:7-9 reminds us not to break the command of God for the sake of tradition.

The
Challenge

Are we
guilty of such behaviour? The image of believers as hypocrites is one which
is popular in the world today. An image which portrays Christians as preaching good
deeds but not wanting to get their hands dirty. To some extent we might deserve
it. It is often very easy for us to preach at those who are living with
completely different realities from us. Like the synagogue who knew nothing of
the woman's 18 years of suffering. It is all too easy to withhold aid to anyone
we see being outside our own circle. We are instructed, however, to be gracious
to one another. Romans 14:1 "Accept him whose faith is weak, without
passing judgment on disputable matters". And yet too often for the sake of
tradition and practice we isolate others. We render the church irrelevant
because we are holding on to traditions made by man rather than scripture inspired
by God

One
example that comes to mind is dress code. It has become a tradition in some
churches to wear your best clothes on a Sunday for church. In churches across
the world it has become a barrier to those outside our faith community. If
someone comes to church who doesn't know the protocol or the dress code, and
they are turned away or made to feel uncomfortable because of some judgmental
stare from a believer, then we are missing the way. We should look at those
people and go out our way to welcome them, to make them feel loved. We should
never keep people from Christ. We should always be drawing them to Christ.

This
example should give us all cause to think . To think about our actions both
inside and outside of the church. Are you a bridge or a barrier to people
coming to Christ? Are we loving in the way Christ is? We are all examples,
whether we want to be or not. The question is, are we good examples or bad
ones?

It is
interesting to see that in the Gospel story the woman did not ask Jesus to heal
her. Christ saw her, recognised her need and took action. And in today's world
there is an urgent need for us, as believers to do same. Too often we regulate
compassionate service to "charitable organisation". To Oxfam. That's
their job. To benefits agency. That's their job. To Ministers and church
leaders. But we are called to serve wherever we can. In whatever way we can.
Big or small. To work for love, justice and peace wherever God has placed
us.

In the
first reading from Isaiah 58 we heard that as Christians, we are called to
serve our brothers and sisters who are hungry and oppressed. If we do then
verse 10 says that our light will rise in the darkness, and our night will
become like the noonday. It is our heavenly mandate to love. Not to be inward
looking and focus on ourselves. Not to leave the work to others but to think of
our fellow man. Jesus didn't wait to be asked. He saw a need and he acted. We
should do the same.

The Power of love/hope

Jesus
came preaching the kingdom of God, and while the law helps us to make sense of
and get more out of life, it must always bend to the love and grace that
constitutes the abundant life Jesus proclaims. Law helps order our world, but
grace is what holds the world together. Law pushes us to care for each other,
but grace restores us to each other when we've failed in the law. Above and
beyond all the laws ever received or conceived, the absolute law is love. Love
God and love your neighbour. Or, perhaps, love God by loving your
neighbour.

Brothers
and sisters, there is a real need for God's people-US - to be real, to be open,
and to let our lights shine. We need to pray for God to come and change us and
challenge us, as individuals and as a church. We need to wait on Him for
directions and guidance. We need to ask Him to use us to bring people to Jesus. We need to love people with the love of Christ. To resist the urge to assume we know the law better than others like the synagogue ruler, and to sympathize with those who are living with very different realities than we are.

Jesus is
inviting us, even now to release others from bondage and set them free, even if
it means suspending or revising our sense of the law in favour of love.

Friday, 16 August 2013

A year ago I saw a Starbucks advert- "You and Starbucks-It's got to be more than coffee". I concluded that what they mean is yes Starbucks is noted for coffee but we actually could do more.

With that advert in mind, I suggested to my local Ghanaian Methodist Fellowship anniversary committee that we should have the theme- "You and God- It's got to be more than Sunday worship" for our 10th anniversary in September . The committee members were intrigued and asked for my thinking behind the theme. I share with you my thinking behind the theme.

Christians are very much noted for their gatherings on Sundays to worship, though some gather on different days. What we do outside the church halls by way of Christian virtue is a private matter. There appears to be greater attention on what we do by way of worship than anything else.

What could Christians do other than worshipping God? Quite a lot. And how are we doing?
For some Christians the best they could do to help someone in need is to find them contact numbers of a charity or a government department. They're somehow passive in meeting that need personally. The vast number of charities and NGO's across the world tells me that Christianity has failed. We appear to have surrendered our Christian acts to the charity organisations. There are charities specialising from A-Z.

Some will say many of the charities are set up by Christians or Christian groups and are sponsored by many Christians. That's all well and good. How many percentages of Christians have set up charities or have financed them anyway? The point is if we have been good practising Christians and neighbours, many of these charities wouldn't have been around. We would be at the point of need straight away to be actively involved in its solution. We would be all over in our blocks, estates and neighbourhoods.

Jesus said "I was hungry but you would not feed me, thirsty but you would not give me a drink; I was a stranger but you would not welcome me in your homes, naked but you would not clothe me; I was sick and in prison but you would not take care of me." Matthew 25:42-43.

Many Christians see what Christ talked about in their daily lives but do nothing about it. Christianity has been reduced to Sunday worship. All other things that happen around us are not our business. We have lost all the practical things that make us Christians.

There are many Christians who make financial or time contributions to charities but when come face to face with the very same thing they give money to, they wouldn't bother about it. Shouldn't charity begin at home?

I am very much sure the discourse in the text didn't end as presented by Matthew. I bet Christ challenged the people to tell him why they didn't do anything about the situations described. And I bet some of the answers would include the following;

But I gave them some charity contact

I thought that was the responsibility of the state

I thought the church would help

I thought they were lazy and don't want to work

I thought they brought it upon themselves

Some of the above reasons might be right but still the question is can you help?